Important: This documentation covers Yarn 1 (Classic).
For Yarn 2+ docs and migration guide, see yarnpkg.com.

Package detail

reload

alallier73.9kMIT3.3.0TypeScript support: definitely-typed

Node.js module to refresh and reload your code in your browser when your code changes. No browser plugins required.

reload, refresh, http, express, development

readme

reload

Build Status js-standard-style codecov NPM version

Automatically refresh and reload your code in your browser when your code changes. No browser plugins required.

Table Of Contents

Why?

Restarting your HTTP server and refreshing your browser is annoying.

How does it work?

Reload works in two different ways depending on if you're using it:

  1. In an existing Express application in which it creates a server side route for reload or,
  2. As a command line tool which starts its own Express application to monitor the file you're editing for changes and to serve reload-client.js to the browser.

Once reload-server and reload-client are connected, the client side code opens a WebSocket to the server and waits for the WebSocket to close, once it closes, reload waits for the server to come back up (waiting for a socket on open event), once the socket opens we reload the page.

Installation

npm install [-g] [--save-dev] reload

Two ways to use reload

There are two different ways to use reload.

  1. In an Express application, allowing your whole project to utilize reload when the code is altered
  2. As a command line application to serve up static HTML files and be able to reload when the code is altered

Using reload in Express

When used with Express reload creates a new Express route for reload. When you restart the server, the client will detect the server being restarted and automatically refresh the page.

Reload can be used in conjunction with tools that allow for automatically restarting the server such as supervisor (recommended), nodemon, forever, etc.

Express Example

server.js:

var express = require('express')
var http = require('http')
var path = require('path')
var reload = require('reload')
var bodyParser = require('body-parser')
var logger = require('morgan')

var app = express()

var publicDir = path.join(__dirname, 'public')

app.set('port', process.env.PORT || 3000)
app.use(logger('dev'))
app.use(bodyParser.json()) // Parses json, multi-part (file), url-encoded

app.get('/', function (req, res) {
  res.sendFile(path.join(publicDir, 'index.html'))
})

var server = http.createServer(app)

// Reload code here
reload(app).then(function (reloadReturned) {
  // reloadReturned is documented in the returns API in the README

  // Reload started, start web server
  server.listen(app.get('port'), function () {
    console.log('Web server listening on port ' + app.get('port'))
  })
}).catch(function (err) {
  console.error('Reload could not start, could not start server/sample app', err)
})

public/index.html:

<!doctype html>
<html>
  <head>
    <title>Reload Express Sample App</title>
  </head>
  <body>
    <h1>Reload Express Sample App</h1>
    <!-- All you have to do is include the reload script and have it be on every page of your project -->
    <!-- You do not create this route, reload creates it for you automatically -->
    <script src="/reload/reload.js"></script>
  </body>
</html>

Refer to the reload express sample app for this working example.

Manually firing server-side reload events

You can manually call a reload event by calling reload() yourself. An example is shown below:

Manual fire with promises

reload(app).then((reloadReturned) => {
  watch.watchTree(__dirname + "/public", function (f, curr, prev) {
    // Fire server-side reload event
    reloadReturned.reload();
  });
})

Manual fire with async/await

const startServer = async () => {
    const reloadReturned = await reload(app);

    watch.watchTree(__dirname + "/public", function (f, curr, prev) {
        // Fire server-side reload event
        reloadReturned.reload();
    })
}

API for Express

Reload returns a promise. The API takes a required express application and an optional options object. The promise returns an object (for information on the returned object see below).

With try/catch

To call Reload you should use a then/catch to call reload.

  •   reload(app [,opts]).then(function (reloadReturned) {
        // reloadReturned object see returns documentation below for what is returned
    
        // Reload started
      }).catch(function (err) {
        // Reload did not start correctly, handle error
      })

With async/await

If you are in an asynchronous function you can call Reload with await

  • async function asyncCall() {
      try {
        var reloadReturned = await reload(app [,opts])
        // reloadReturned object see returns documentation below for what is returned.
      } catch (err) {
        // Handle error
      }
    }

Consult the [migration guide](MIGRATIONGUIDE.md) for help updating reload across major versions._

Parameters

Table of reload parameters
Parameter Name Type Description Optional
app object The app. It may work with other frameworks, or even with Connect. At this time, it's only been tested with Express.
opts object An optional object of options for reload. Refer to table below on possible options
Table of options for reload opts parameter
Parameter Name Type Description Optional Default
port number Port to run reload on. 9856
webSocketServerWaitStart boolean When enabled will delay starting and opening WebSocket server when requiring reload. After enabling use the startWebSocketServer function returned in the object provided by the API to start the WebSocket. Note: Failing to call the returned function with this option enabled will cause reload not to work. See return API for more information FALSE
route string Route that reload should use to serve the client side script file. Changing the route will require the script tag URL to change. Reload will always strip any occurrence of reload.js and append reload.js for you. This is to ensure case, order, and use of / is correct. For example specifying newRoutePath as the route will give reload a route of newRoutePath/reload.js. (Recommend not modifying). reload
forceWss boolean Forces reload client connections to always use wss (secure websockerts) even when the window location is HTTP FALSE
https object HTTP options object. When defined runs reload in HTTPS mode {}
https.certAndKey object Object that holds configuration for HTTPS key and cert configuration {}
https.certAndKey.key string File path to HTTP key (not optional when defining an HTTPS object) | null
https.certAndKey.cert string File path to HTTP cert (not optional when defining an HTTPS object) | null
https.p12 object Object that holds configuration for HTTPS P12 configuration {}
https.p12.p12Path string File path or file contents as string (Not optional when using P12 configuration | null
https.passphrase string Shared passphrase used for a single private key and/or p12. null
verbose boolean If set to true, will show logging on the server and client side. FALSE

Returns

An object containing:

Name Type Description
reload function A function that when called reloads all connected clients. For more information see manually firing server-side reload events.
startWebSocketServer function Returns a promise. Starts and opens the WebSocket server required for reload. Only defined when using the optional parameter webSocketServerWaitStart. Read the parameters for more information
closeServer function Returns a promise. Closes Reload WebSocket server
wss object Web socket server

Using reload as a command line application

There are two ways to use the command line application.

  1. In a directory serving blank static HTML files or
  2. In a project with a package.json file

Each will require different modes of installing.

In case one you should install reload globally with npm install reload -g. Also with reload installed globally you can go to any directory with an HTML file and use the command reload to constantly watch it and reload it while you make changes.

In case two you should install locally with npm install --save-dev, since this tool is to aid in development you should install it as a dev dependency.

Navigate to your html directory:

reload -b

This will open your index.html file in the browser. Any changes that you make will now reload in the browser. You don't need to modify your HTML at all.

Usage for Command Line Application

Usage: reload [options]

Options:

  -h, --help                     output usage information
  -V, --version                  output the version number
  -b, --browser                  Open in the browser automatically.
  -n, --hostname [hostname]      If -b flag is being used, this allows for custom hostnames. Defaults to localhost.
  -d, --dir [dir]                The directory to serve up. Defaults to current dir.
  -w, --watch-dir [watch-dir]    The directory to watch. Defaults the serving directory.
  -e, --exts [extensions]        Extensions separated by commas or pipes. Defaults to html,js,css.
  -p, --port [port]              The port to bind to. Can be set with PORT env variable as well. Defaults to 8080
  -s, --start-page [start-page]  Specify a start page. Defaults to index.html
  -f, --fallback [fallback]      Fallback to the start page when route is not found
  -v, --verbose [verbose]        Turning on logging on the server and client side. Defaults to false

License

(MIT License)

Copyright 2023

Orginal Author:

JP Richardson jprichardson@gmail.com

Owned by:

Alexander J. Lallier mralexlallier@gmail.com

changelog

Next version

3.3.0 / 2024-08-14

Reload command line quality of life enhancements

3.2.2 / 2024-08-12

A bunch of dependency updates and some project maintenance

3.2.1 / 2023-01-02

Happy New Year!

3.2.0 / 2021-06-09

3.1.1 / 2020-09-29

3.1.0 / 2020-06-10

3.0.6 / 2020-06-10

  • Contains the changes from 3.1.0 but was semantically versioned incorrectly. It is recommended not to use this version and upgrade to 3.1.0

3.0.5 / 2020-05-25

3.0.4 / 2019-01-13

3.0.3 / 2019-10-20

3.0.2 / 2019-10-06

3.0.1 / 2019-04-20

Version 3.0.1

Added

Fixed

Updated

3.0.0 / 2019-04-07

Version 3.0.0

Consult Migration Guide for help with updating from Version 2.x to 3.x

Breaking/Removed

  • Removed deprecated parameters (Reload no longer takes the server argument and will error if you provide it)
  • Removed support for Node versions 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9

Breaking/Added

  • Reload now returns a promise
    • Functions in the return API also return promises
      • closerServer
      • startWebSocketServer
    • Reload returns errors in promises

Added

Changed

  • Updates dependencies

Closed these issues

2.4.0 / 2018-12-02

2.3.1 / 2018-08-06

2.3.0 / 2018-06-11

2.2.2 / 2017-08-20

Fixed bug that caused HTML files to not be served when using directory flag (reload command line). See: https://github.com/alallier/reload/pull/139

2.2.1 / 2017-08-05

Fixed regression causing reload command line to only serve HTML files. See: https://github.com/alallier/reload/pull/134

2.2.0 / 2017-07-27

  • Dropped express as a dependency (in reload command line). Reload now uses a vanilla node http server to achieve the same result. This update for the command line offers no changes to the end user and simply modifies the underlying code. See: https://github.com/alallier/reload/pull/132

2.1.0 / 2017-07-25

2.0.1 / 2017-07-20

2.0.0 / 2017-07-09

See V2.0.0 PR https://github.com/alallier/reload/pull/118

Added

  • Added object based parameters (Issue #77 / Originally solved in PR #101 and refactored in #104)
  • Added port configuration (Issue #60 / Originally solved in PR #68 and refactored in #104)
  • Added timestamp to reload command line reloading (Issue #7 / PR #78)
  • Added node 8 support (Issue #106 / PR #119)
  • Added table of contents to README (Issue #103 / PR #105)
  • Added return API to README (PR #121)

Modified

  • Abstracted reload call to an index.js file. Index file now calls reload.js source file. This is to abstract the reload command line calling with a third argument that is now private and not apart of the public API (PR #117)
  • Update dependencies to latest and add package-lock.json files (PR #109)
  • Audited and refactored return API (Issue #120 / PR #121)

Removed

  • Drop support for server and just use ports (Issue #102 / PR #104)
  • Removed support of node 0.1 and 0.12 (Issue #73 / PR #86)
  • Separate server and app initialization into two parts. (This was originally fixed in PR #71 but was reversed in PR #104 when the decision to drop server was made.)

API Breaking Changes

This version makes breaking changes to the reload API. The only required argument to reload now is app. This makes reload a lot easier to use. Reload takes a maximum of two arguments app and an opts (options) object with the following optional parameters, port, route, and verbose. Reload runs on default port 9856 unless otherwise specified in the opts object.

How to upgrade from Version 1 to Version 2

Before Version 2 reload always attached to your server's port by passing the server in a argument to reload. We have now dropped support for server and reload runs on ports only. Reload now has one required parameter app and one optional parameter opts an object of reload options. Below are two upgrade examples for the only two possible 1.x configurations.

Upgrade with required arguments: reload(server, app) becomes reload(app)

Upgrade with both required arguments and the one optional argument: reload(server, app, true) becomes reload(app, {verbose: true})

It is important to note that reload only uses ports now. So upgrading using the examples above will have reload run on it's default port 9856. If you want to run reload on a different port you need to specify a port in the opts object like: reload(app, {port: 9852})

Most people can just use the default settings, allowing reload(app) to work in most cases.

Please refer to the full API in the README.

1.1.7 / 2017-06-28

Repository ownership was transfered from jprichardson to alallier

1.1.6 / 2017-06-18

Add Mac building in Travis. See https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/98

1.1.5 / 2017-05-13

Fixed standard call so that our bin file also got tested. See https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/85

1.1.4 / 2017-05-13

Added AppVeyor to build our tests in an Windows environment. See https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/92

1.1.3 / 2017-04-28

Upgrade Standard to ~10.0.2 in order for the build to pass node 0.1 and 0.12 Also removed depricated fs.exists and replaced with fs.access See: https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/75

1.1.2 / 2017-04-16

Fix multiple websockets at once when using reload.reload(); See: https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/57

1.1.1 / 2017-01-28

Fixed undefined error log on send message. See: https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/59

1.1.0 / 2016-11-12

Added client end web socket support for https. See: https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/54

1.0.2 / 2016-10-31

Added error handling to websocket send. See: https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/49

1.0.1 / 2016-07-15

Fixed onbeforeunload event not firing in reload-client See: https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/46

1.0.0 / 2016-06-24

Added

  • Two new badges to the README (code-style and npm version)
  • Verbose mode as option for both Express and command line usage
  • A sample app for express

Modified

  • Re-wrote the README to reflect all of these changes
  • Updated dependencies to their latest version’s
  • Fixed race condition that caused reload to spam the server when using sockets for automatic reloading

Removed

  • All delays (wait, normal, and socket) (Reload is now all automatic using web sockets (no delays at all))
  • Client side sockjs web sockets (removed sockjs) (Now using native web sockets on the client side and ws on server side)

See: https://github.com/jprichardson/reload/pull/41

0.8.2 / 2016-06-24

0.8.1 / 2016-06-05

0.8.0 / 2015-12-21

0.7.0 / 2015-10-21

0.6.0 / 2015-10-12

0.5.0 / 2015-09-28

0.4.0 / 2015-08-17

0.3.0 / 2015-07-17

0.2.0 / 2015-06-29

  • Added Express 4 Support

0.1.0 / 2013-09-30

  • silence sockjs
  • created reload bin that is useful for browser/html development

0.0.2 / 2013-03-14

  • fixed bug that caused failure on hashbang urls
  • set proper mime type on reload.js client side script

0.0.1 / 2013-03-13

  • Initial release.